$35 for Photos with Santa at Schwabe Studio Photography ($77.95 Value)
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Photogs forge portraits with holiday backgrounds during 30-minute in-studio session, with prints & photo magnets made of winning shot
Photographers preserve subjects’ precious memories, abolishing the need to hastily scoop reflections out of nearby fountains. Seek permanence with today’s Groupon: for $35, you get a holiday photography package at Schwabe Studio Photography (a $77.95 value). The package includes:
- A 30-minute photo session
- A print package of one pose that includes:
- One 8”x10” print
- Eight billfold prints
- Two 5”x7” prints
- Two 4”x5” magnets
- One holiday frame
Today’s deal is valid for photo-session bookings from Saturday, November 26, through Saturday, December 17.
Schwabe Studio Photography’s shutterbugs draw on more than 60 years of experience snapping Dayton’s denizens and framing vibrant portraits. During the 30-minute seasonal photo session, family and friends can commit their full range of emotion to film with poses depicting happiness, superhappiness, and bunny ears. A choice of four holiday-themed backdrops imbues shots with festivity, including a jolly scene with Santa or a winter wonderland. Once the shutter has snapped shut, muses can choose a winning shot to immortalize in print form and slip into a holiday frame. A pair of photo magnets keeps important papers and artwork attached to metallic surfaces such as refrigerators and visiting tin men.
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About Schwabe Studio Photography
With more than 50 years of combined experience snapping and framing shots, the artists at Schwabe Studio Photography usher fleeting moments into the future during in-studio and on-location sessions. They specialize in photographing families, newlyweds, and soon-to-be-graduates, who can choose from seven unique senior portrait sessions. Sports-themed shoots showcase young athletes in action, and birthday parties inside the studio capture youngsters dressed in whimsical costumes. Once each session's shutters have snapped shut, the photo artists easily print out the digital images, which, unlike film images, need not be developed inside a stolen cocoon.